Friday, 18 April 2025

Let’s be more compassionate towards the homeless animals

Facebook
X
WhatsApp
Telegram
Email

LET’S READ SUARA SARAWAK/ NEW SARAWAK TRIBUNE E-PAPER FOR FREE AS ​​EARLY AS 2 AM EVERY DAY. CLICK LINK

I write as a dog owner, an advocate for humane treatment of animals and responsible pet ownership.

There is a large community of individuals and animal lovers who subscribe to the moral obligation of humane treatment of animals and call for the best practices of animal welfare policies.

Yet, beyond belief, one twisted and perverse campaign was recently unveiled by SMC Public Health, Environment and Municipal Services chairman Richard Ting.

Here’s what takes the cake.

  1. For every ‘alive and well’ animal delivered to SMC for disposal, a bounty of RM10 per puppy head and RM50 per adult dog head is offered.
  2. Poor Pendidikan Moral lessons by the ‘exemplary’ chairman are:
  • that animal lives don’t matter;
  • that pets are disposable commodities; and
  • that the barbaric acts of inflicting harm, suffering and death on ‘alive and well’ animals are now being normalised and rewarded with bounty prize money.

We can’t get more perverse than this.

  1. He also proudly announced that strays caught cannot be donated, delivered to pet shops or NGOs, for sale or be rehomed or to participate in any adoption programmes.
See also  Biting US tariffs and opportunities for ASEAN

Pray tell which section of what law is he citing? And what loathsome policy is he trying to set precedence?

The man whose salary is paid by taxpayers and whose entrusted core job obligations is to serve the community with well thought-out policies to protect the voiceless by implementing punitive measures on abuse, neglect and irresponsible pet owners actually spews a detestable bounty incentive of RM10 to RM50 for every surrendered dog head.

Nobody wants rabies. The enormity of the tasks at hand needs to be shared by both civil society and government.

This is not exclusive to government and NGOs alone. Everyone must work together towards a common vision of the desired outcome.

We must respect the sanctity of life and be compassionate in handling strays and all life forms.

We need not rehash horror stories on how puppies, dogs, cats whether strays or lost, are captured and culled in the name of rabies, without recourse in past years.

See also  Educating youth by igniting their awareness

Thankfully a voice of wisdom cuts right through this madness. Against this backdrop, our Premier who, contrary to Ting’s pronouncements, recently promptly proposed a statewide neutering campaign in place of rewarding public captures.

He further called for a humane stray population management to be studied.

We are thankful to our Premier who has set the ball rolling in a radically different direction.

We now appeal to the state government to review and revamp past policies of mass culling which has proven to be ineffective for rabies control.

It is a timely call for a fresh blueprint and road map. The AWA 2015 came into force in July 2017. It is indeed timely for the Animal Welfare Act 2017 to be extended to Sarawak.

Let the recent AFA conference not be one of optics, self aggrandisement and hype but one that bears real fruits on the ground.

Let us together commit to be more compassionate and empathetic towards the homeless animals.

See also  Remembering Qu Yuan

Let sound and proven methods be implemented to eradicate rabies in our state.

As Mahatma Gandhi aptly reminds: “The greatness of a nation and its moral progress can be judged by the way its animals are treated.”

ANNA WEE
Co-founder,
Furry Soup Kitchen,
Kuching

Related News

Most Viewed Last 2 Days

b285e9a6-e806-4ef6-a303-3527e5c6d34c
Special Olympics Sarawak set to shine in Kuching on 2-5 May
0fb29758-f23d-4fde-961a-c66dc1ef79ad
UNIMAS offers Malaysia’s first Google Certified Educators programme
af738b00-8209-4ec8-aaff-5e94f06aae9e
Injury leads to life-changing diagnosis for Demak Laut father
213a03eb-761b-4a90-a239-08b349224bbb
i-CATS to commence aerospace engineering programmes in Aug 2025
a82d8efc-43c4-4ec2-8217-01c7fc8fb013
New i-CATS campus construction set to begin in February 2026